COMSNETS

2018

10th International Conference on COMmunication Systems & NETworkS

January 3 - 7 | Bengaluru, India

TechnicalCo-Sponsors

In-Cooperation With

COMSNETS 2019 will be held from 7 to 12 January 2019 at the Chancery Pavilion Hotel, Bangalore, India.
Please be on the lookout for the new home page by the middle of February 2018. See you at COMSNETS 2019 !

Panel Discussions

Panel 1 - Connected and Self-Driving Cars in India: Will They Ever Work?

Date - 4th Jan 2018, 05:45 PM - 7:00 PM | Venue: Grand Ball Room

Abstract:

Smart, autonomous/self-driving and connected vehicles have the potential of huge societal impact. Most of these efforts today are focused in developed regions of the world where road and communication infrastructure is advanced and reliable. Since autonomous self-driving vehicles require support infrastructure with clear indications of the surrounding driving environment to detect obstacles, pedestrians, signage, etc., it is important to understand the limitations of this emerging technology to apply it in a safe, predictable and cost effective manner in challenging situations. This panel will discuss and debate the state of the art and several important questions in this context, including the following:

What are the challenges of self-driving cars, and how are academics, startups and established industry players addressing them”?

Can autonomous vehicles be deployed safely in developing regions of the world? What are the associated technical challenges?

What new algorithms are needed and what additional requirements are placed on the computing and communication infrastructure to mitigate the challenges of the less than adequate physical transport infrastructure? At what cost?

Do crowd-sensing and vehicle-to-vehicle communication techniques play a bigger role in these environments in receiving high fidelity data to operate vehicles autonomously?

Panel 2 - Networking Research is Dead. Long live Networking Research!

Date - 5th Jan 2018, 05:15 PM - 6:30 PM | Venue: Grand Ball Room

Abstract:

The lines between networking, storage and compute are fast blurring and have been for a while. A lot of networking functions are now part of the compute infrastructure with host based networking techniques. Software defined networking (SDN) also proposes to put the network intelligence and control in servers that coordinate the operation of distributed programmable network devices. Special purpose network middlebox functions are now virtualized and run in VMs and containers. With these accelerating trends, is the network just fast and dumb plumbing with limited innovation potential? This panelists will provide their perspectives on whether networking is still a hot area, provide a vision for future networking and will debate the following topics:

What are the new emerging challenges in networking? What are the “holy-grail” networking problems?

Is inter-disciplinary networking research for example, with machine learning, programming languages topic areas the right way to go?

How should a student interested in networking choose relevant problems to work on?

Panel 3 - Connecting the Next Trillion: The Future of Wireless at a Crossroads

Date - 6th Jan 2018, 05:15 PM - 6:30 PM | Venue: Grand Ball Room

Abstract:

We are on the brink of the widespread proliferation of several competing and complementary wireless technologies, such as 5G and ubiquitous Wifi, LoRa and NB-IoT, loons, drones, and satellite communications . It is important to understand the benefits and the shortcomings of each, and where these fit into the broader picture of emerging IoT applications such as Connected Cars. In this panel, we shall discuss the pros and cons of these technologies, and, apart from their applicability to the Internet of Things, we shall also discusswhat their proliferation will mean for the general population. We will debate where we, as a community, should be focusing our attentions: should we concentrate cutting-edge technology for the privileged but powerful few, or should we apply our efforts to ensure that larger sections of the world population have access to wireless services and technologies.